British model Iskra Lawrence is a beautiful creature, and her flawless photos have appeared in all sorts of major campaigns including American Eagle’s lingerie brand Aerie.

And while Lawrence looks like the epitome of perfection, the model wants us to know that she has fleshy bits of skin and fat just like the rest of us. She loves her rolls, and wants us to embrace our bodies for what they are, too. She’s not just a drop-dead beauty, but a positive role model for women of all ages.

“If I have some rolls showing or whatever, I’m not scared to post that,” Lawrence says in the video below.

“I’m not scared to sit here in my underwear and make this video for you guys, because this is my body. You know, it really doesn’t matter. I just wish we saw more of it.”

According to Lawrence, these perfect model poses that we see in the media come down to angles. How Lawrence sits–straight up, making her tummy as flat as possible–and how she moves her torso gives a more toned version of herself. But the reality is, her rolls are still there! It’s a part of being a human with skin.

“Because of poses and editing we are lead to believe it’s not as attractive to have rolls, but I want to demonstrate with the power of posing just how easy it is to have a flat tummy one minute and rolls the next,” she states. “And guess what: either way is beautiful because our bodies are freaking amazing.”

Lawrence’s voice is just the kind of body positive messaging we need more of. Yes, our eyeballs are inundated with perfect faces, arms, stomachs and legs in magazines, on television and online, countless times a day. But hearing that models’ bodies are purposely positioned to get the most lean look makes us feel a whole lot more comfortable in our own skin, soft fleshy parts and all.

Best of all, Lawrence isn’t alone. More and more young women are openly owning and loving their bodies just as they are. This past weekend, body positive advocate Milly Smith posted a side-by-side photo of the magic of control-top nylons.

In one photo, the tights are high up around her waist, and in the second, lower under her belly. “I am comfortable with my body in both. Neither is more or less worthy. Neither makes me more or less of a human being,” Smith writes.

Smith and Lawrence share this love of their bodies, an act we think all women should cultivate.